An exceptional appearance at the Herodio

Publication on the concert ‘En phones ke Organis’, Herodion, 1998

This time round, the event dedicated to folk music which will take place for the fourth year running at the Herodion on Wednesday 3rd June, will be special. And how could it not be, since it will be honoured by a great person, the great lady of our traditional singing, Domna Samiou. As host of the evening, she will guide us through the musical treasures of our land and simultaneously she will be welcoming the leading Greek virtuosos and two of the most important brass bands from Macedonia.

The program which Domna Samiou has prepared for the evening is exceptional, in that it will present certain highly decorated slow tunes from the Aegean and Asia Minor for the first time.

Next will come the ouds, the lute and the tambouras.  The leading virtuoso of the oud Nikos Saragoudas will meet the younger players Christos Tsiamoulis, Kyriakos Kalaintzidis, Socrates Sinopoulos and Pericles Papapetropoulos in an enchanting interplay along the paths of the traditional makams of the Orient.

Greek sounds will dominate next, with davuls, tambourines, zil bells and spoons played by four of the leading instrumentalists, Yiorgos Gevgelis, Vangelis Karipis, Petros Kourtis and Andreas Pappas. The climax of the evening come with the composite Macedonian dances, and the rhythms of Thrace and Pontus, with yet another meeting of two top instrumentalists, Yiorgos Kotsinis on the clarinet and Michalis Kaliontzidis on the Pontic lyra.  The concert will close with two famous brass bands, that of Dimitris Kotsikas from Kozani and that of Yannis Zlatanis from Edessa.

The event is being supported by the Museum of Traditional Greek Musical Instruments ‘Phoebos Anogianakis’. The research and supervision is being conducted by the ethnomusicologist Lambros Liavas.

Translated by Alexander Seferiades

An exceptional appearance at the Herodio
An exceptional appearance at the Herodio
Newspaper , Avgi , 29 May 1998

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Born in Athens in 1959. He studied Law at the Athens Law School, piano and Theory of European Music at the Hellenic Conservatory and with Yannis Ioannidis, as well as Byzantine and Greek folk music with Simon Karas. He was granted a fellowship by the Peloponnesian Folklore Foundation and […]